My brother emailed me this one yesterday:Bean. It kinda has a Chronicles of Prydain feel. The art is quality even if the updates aren't regular.

Meanwhile, in some other recess of internet creativity, The Order of Tales has completed its two year journey. While this story lacked some of the psychedelic elements of Evan's previous work, Rice Boy, it did create a satisfying epic tale that delved into the worth and meaning of story and legend. I liked Teller Koark. He was a more traditional hero. The fact that he had arms and thus the ability to swing a sword didn't hurt.

Evan's next project is titled Vattu. The teaser image is gorgeous. I look forward to another tightly woven narrative filled with adventure and refreshingly unpretentious symbolism.

Edited by poko, 18 July 2010 - 02:38 PM.

-Doctor-

"The universe is big, its vast, and complicated, and ridiculous and sometimes - very rarely - impossible things just happen and we call them miracles."

I tried Riceboy and was not intrigued enough to return. I even spent many hours reading because I was like "If I leave I'm not going to take the time to come back and Clark and poko seem to like this thing so I'm trying to give it a good chance."

Uh, perhaps as experts you guys might be able to tell me why, when I followed Cracked.com's link to the funniest webcomic, I lobbed on to a webcomic site that didn't have a webcomic? Or has the pedal powered 'puta slipped a cog again?

Wasted Spent another pleasant few hours clicking through Blip - not sure how I'd describe it, umm female centric without being fluffy bunnies? That's an understatement! Definately not PG3! The only drawback I can see is that after four years it still hasn't closed off any story arcs. The Lady Belfear will love this one!

DarkBrain Comics doesn't get many Brownie points for their content, which after an admittedly cursory check is all adult content and looks a might shallow, but how they've presented their comics is fascinating! The technology is probably pretty simple but I don't think I've seen it anywhere else. First off, you get to choose either with audio or without - like the blurb says, you've got to try the audio version at least once! The trick is that when you click on one of their comics, the panels come on one at a time with the speech bubbles coming on in sequence accompanied by an impressively professional narration, sound effects and original music.

I'm not sure how much value this is - is it me or does it seem a bit slow paced? - but it certainly pushes the envelope in terms of exploring the possibilities of the medium.